Showing posts with label Puerto Rico Tourism Company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Puerto Rico Tourism Company. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 May 2016

Zika Affects Puerto Rico Tourism

Puerto Rico's tourism industry is hoping to ease tourists' concerns about the Zika virus on the cash-strapped island, describing the extra precautions businesses are taking.

"We feel this has been blown out of proportion," Clarisa Jimenez, president and CEO of the Puerto Rico Hotel and Tourism Association told ABC News. "We have taken all the measures that the CDC has recommended from day one."

Tourism is particularly important to Puerto Rico, as the U.S. commonwealth struggles through its recession and its inability to pay $72 billion in public debt. Puerto Rico's hotel business comprises about 7.1 percent of the island's GDP, and adding satellite businesses brings the percentage closer to 10 percent, according to the Puerto Rico Tourism Company, the public corporation that promotes the island.

Following a strong year in tourism in 2015, occupancy rates grew 11 percent in January compared to last year, according to the Puerto Rico Tourism Company. But February growth was down 3 percent and March growth was down 5 percent.

The Puerto Rico Tourism Company is pushing to inform potential visitors about misconceptions about the presence of the virus on the island. Zika is typically spread by mosquito bites, but sexual intercourse can also spread the disease. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said Zika can cause a birth abnormality called microcephaly, in which babies are born with unusually small heads.

The tourism group hopes to make clear that the CDC hasn't banned travel to the island when it recently issued an "alert level two" notice to Puerto Rico and other destinations. The CDC suggests that travelers "practice enhanced precautions" when traveling to Puerto Rico. The CDC has three levels of travel warnings: watch level one, alert level two and warning level three.

Authorities and hotels say they are taking extra precautions with regular EPA-approved repellent spraying procedures, assuring proper chlorine levels in pools and fountains and informing guests about practices like keeping balcony doors and windows closed at night and applying sunscreen first before repellent.

The Puerto Rico Tourism Company, which follows CDC's recommendations that pregnant women avoid travel to certain destinations, also points out that less than one-half of one percent of Puerto Rico's 3.5 million residents have contracted the Zika virus. The majority of Zika cases are concentrated in areas away from typical tourist destinations, the company said. Puerto Rico has counted 785 confirmed cases of the virus, including its first death from it.

Marisol Colon, cluster general manager of Embassy Suites Hotels, Puerto Rico, said hotel cancellations were greater than expected in the first three months of the year, but she is optimistic about the upcoming summer months, which are actually considered low season.

"People are shying away from their concerns and starting to visit the island," Colon told ABC News.

Jimenez said leisure travel to the island has increased 20 percent, year-over-year. More than 60 groups visited the island in March and April, including the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians Spring Convention in San Juan.

Dr. Larry W. Anderson, who attended the convention said in a statement that the city, hotels and restaurants "have been very intentional of making sure that there is no place for mosquitoes to hatch, to lay eggs or to breed."

Major League Baseball and the players' union announced earlier this month they were scrapping a two-game series between the Pittsburgh Pirates and Florida Marlins that was scheduled for May 30-31. The union asked commissioner Rob Manfred to relocate the games after some players expressed concerns about the Zika virus.

Puerto Rico's secretary of health, Ana Ríus Armendáriz, told Univision Radio at the time that she felt “absolutely outraged” about the cancellation of the baseball series.

"I’ve always been cautious when offering data about the virus. I don’t offer hypothesis, I offer data," she told WKAQ 580 earlier this month.

Puerto Rico governor Alejandro Garcia Padilla told local newspaper El Nuevo Dia that it was "ironic" athletes are willing to go to Brazil for the summer Olympic games but don't want to go to Puerto Rico, the Associated Press reported.

New York Yankees outfielder Carlos Beltran, a Puerto Rican native, told ESPN, after the cancellation was announced, “We all know that Puerto Rico is going through a very difficult time and this is basically just another low blow for the island."

Thursday, 12 November 2015

PUERTO RICO: Seaborne And JetBlue Become Codeshare Partners Across The Caribbean

Seaborne Airlines and JetBlue Airways, the largest carrier in San Juan, have finalized terms to begin a codeshare marketing relationship, expanding upon the carriers’ successful interline agreement in place since 2013. The codeshare will help facilitate improved connectivity between two of the top airlines in the Caribbean, subject to receipt of all regulatory approvals.

“We are excited to expand our partnership with JetBlue. Providing improved connectivity in our common hub of San Juan will add tremendous value to Caribbean residents, visitors, and businesses,” said President and CEO of Seaborne Airlines Gary Foss. “We are honored that JetBlue, known for outstanding customer service, would recognize the same that Seaborne employees are providing throughout the Caribbean”, Foss said.

Seaborne, the largest regional operator, and JetBlue, the number one carrier by flights and seats at San Juan Luis Munoz Marin International Airport, offer a combined 50 daily flights that connect 22 destinations. Seaborne will expand the JetBlue network to multiple new destinations, including Anguilla, Dominica, Guadalupe, Martinique, Nevis, St. Kitts, and Tortola. In addition, the Seaborne Airlines network will also provide JetBlue customers’ access to an expanded presence throughout the United States Virgin Islands and the Dominican Republic.

“Our codeshare agreement with Seaborne makes traveling to the Caribbean easier than ever, and that’s the way a beach vacation or family visit should feel,” said Scott Laurence, senior vice president airline planning, JetBlue. “Between JetBlue’s leading position as San Juan’s largest and most customer friendly airline, and Seaborne’s extended local reach, this is a win-win partnership for customers and tourism.”
“The Puerto Rico Tourism Company welcomes this new partnership that supports and strengthens our efforts to increase air access to the Island. This new codeshare marketing relationship between Jet Blue and Seaborne facilitates the entrance of more visitors and positively impacts the economic development in the Island”, said Ingrid I. Rivera Rocafort, executive director of the Puerto Rico Tourism Company.

Along with JetBlue, Seaborne operates as a codeshare partner of American Airlines and Air Europa of Spain. Seaborne offers interline connecting agreements with Delta Airlines and United Airlines as well. In aggregate, Seaborne and the carrier’s partners offer non-stop service to 32 destinations in the Americas and Europe from San Juan. Seaborne’s expanding network out of San Juan has helped solidify San Juan’s position as the Caribbean’s largest hub.

About Seaborne Airlines

Seaborne Airlines has been operating in the Caribbean for over 23 years, carrying more than 2.5 million customers safely. With over 1,500 monthly departures to 16 airports, Seaborne serves San Juan’s Luis Munoz Marin International Airport, St. Thomas airport and Seaplane base, St. Croix airport and Seaplane base, Anguilla, Tortola, Dominica, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Saint Martin, St. Kitts, Nevis, La Romana, Punta Cana, and Santo Domingo. All flights operate with two pilots and two engines under Federal Air Regulation Part 121, the strictest code of the US Federal Air Regulation governing air travel.

About JetBlue

JetBlue is New York’s Hometown Airline™, and a leading carrier in Boston, Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood, Los Angeles (Long Beach), Orlando, and San Juan. JetBlue carries more than 32 million customers a year to 88 cities in the U.S., Caribbean, and Latin America with an average of 875 daily flights. For more information please visit JetBlue.com.